Gaeilge
Irish
Hell's Kitchenne of the first concentrated areas of Irish settlement in Manhattan, where there is evidence that Irish was spoken in the mid-late 19th century, was in and around the Five Points area in what is today Chinatown. Settlement by hometown or county was not unusual, for example with the nearby Fourth Ward known to some as the "Kerry" Ward and the Seventh (today's Lower East Side) known as the "Cork" Ward, reflecting two Irish counties with significant Irish-speaking populations. A later focal point was the West Side, with its active shipping and other industries, including what is now Greenwich Village (with many from County Clare), Chelsea, and Hell's Kitchen — where the Irish Arts Center remains today as an important anchor with its annual Irish Language Day and other programs in and about the language. Many other Manhattan neighborhoods had significant Irish communities through much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, with Washington Heights and Inwood among the last where significant Irish-speaking clusters were likely to be found.